This is the statistic that springs to my mind: you are 35% more likely to have your gun stolen or shoot someone else by accident than defend yourself from an intruder in your home. That to me is quite telling.
It's also quite false. For it to be true, there would have to be roughly 675,000 to
2,700,000 guns stolen annually in the U.S. (taking generally used numbers for defense with a firearm), or a comparable number of firearms injuries.
hold on there. there is no point bandying around imprecisely defined phrases. What do you consider to be "self-defence"?
Do you mean, for example, the right to defend yourself (assuming you've done nothing wrong) from an attacker who's probably gonna kill you? Or do you mean you mean that you've the right to shoot dead ('defend') say, a burgalar who enters your home and has the intention of 'unlawfully' taking away things that you 'own'. It's important to note that this person, by definition, has no intention of killing you.
If someone is illegally on my property, and has already used violence to gain entry, then by definition he is a threat to my life and that of anyone else present. By consensus as broad as Cicero, Machiavelli, and the traditional rights of British subjects, this person, by definition, is to be assumed to be willing to and intent on doing me, at the least, sufficient bodily harm to prevent me from interfering with his unlawful plunder of my property. He is thus to be dealt with in the same fashion as an invading soldier caught in the act of invasion of a country: if he will not surrender, he is to be killed.
I note the use of the word "evil" (the concept invented by religious zealots). This in itself says a lot about Americans' misantropic world view, one which perpetuates an irrational suspicion and fear of others. needing a gun to 'defend' yourself against some imagined 'evil' is the ultimate act of cowardice.
The actions of the murderer at V. Tech were evil -- plain and simple.
If you really believe your statement about needing a gun for defense, then I presume you favor the abolition of firearms completely? None for police, none for the military? In fact, no weapons at all?
Cowardice is when you agree to become a victim -- that's what the people who have invented this business of "the people" meaning "the government" in this one instance have in mind, that we should all be victims. Standing up for yourself is not cowardice.
This is where we probably differ: I think that the 'right to bear arms' actually masquerades as the 'right to defend your property' in the context of current legislation. The converse of your statement that:
implies that, and this is the crux, that you put the value of human life below some object like a laptop or tv (which happens to be secured through a morally fallable system in the first place)
It has generally been the assumption throughout history that a violent entry onto my property indicates a threat to me. It is not the material on my property, but the fact that it is my property. "A man's home is his castle" is a principle that goes back farther than its formulation in the English language; at its heart is the truth that as the boundaries of a nation are to its people, so the boundaries of a home are to its inhabitants -- and, thus, any invasion is to be met with whatever force the sovereign of the "castle" deems suitable.
You are right, but your argument is circular. The lack of enforcement is because of the ever powerful gun lobby influencing politics and the judiciary. BUT the existence of this gun lobby arises from the misantropic formulation of the 2nd Amendment in the first place.
All you have to do is read the discussions about ratification of the Second Amendment to know that it was meant as an individual right which could be exercised either individually or collectively. Its intent was to make certain that the people would be able to maintain the security of a free state against any threat, from home invaders to invaders of the nation to tyrants running the central government. The quote above from the Federalist Papers shows that to be true, that the people being able to defeat whatever standing army the central government might accumulate was the goal.
And the only reason that there is a "gun lobby" is that there are people who would define this away by twisting the words and intent in ways they would never do to any other right. But here it is excessively dangerous, for this is the right which protects all others: only weapons will suffice if the government decides to shut down your newspaper, or require a license to have a church, etc.
I have made the challenge before, and it has not been faced: would you so eagerly impose on free speech, freedom of the press, freedom of religion, freedom from unwarranted search and seizure, and others, the same restrictions as are sought to be imposed on this most basic of rights?
The "lack of enforcement" I spoke of has nothing to do with any "gun lobby"; it is systemic. Parents, schools, and the legal system fail over and again to enforce rules, to enforce consequences. Thus we end up with a society where many people have no respect for either private property or private lives. As a result of this invasion from within, this influx of barbarians into our midst, the right enshrined in the Second Amendment becomes once again needed.